WTS-DC July-August 2015
Transcription
WTS-DC July-August 2015
AUGUST 2015 | VOLUME 4 A MESSAGE FROM THE PRESIDENT WTS-DC Chapter President Melany Alliston-Brick, Toole Design Group Dear WTS-DC Chapter members and friends, As we enter the final days of summer, the WTS-DC Chapter is busy preparing for our upcoming year-end activities, and we have already begun planning several great programs for 2016. We are also ready to begin our annual scholarship application process, but we need your help. To date, we have not been able to fully fund our scholarships for this year, and are still nearly $2,000 short of last year’s funding level and $8,000 under our 2015 scholarship funding goal. We believe that supporting young women as they embark upon their career education in the transportation industry is one of the most important things that WTS does as an organization. Please help us to continue that support by making a tax-deductible donation to the WTS-DC scholarship fund. Or, if you are interested in sponsoring a particular scholarship in whole or in part, please contact me to discuss options for doing so. Thank you for continuing to help us support our next generation of transportation leaders. Best Regards, Melany Alliston-Brick, PE CONTENTS Upcoming Programs ….........2 Announcements ……….........3 Member Spotlights…….........4 New Members…………..........5 People We Know……….........5 Professional Development Corner…...………………...........6 Transportation YOU..............7 Program Articles………..........8 For updates on events and news about women in transportation and transportation planning and engineering in the DC Metro area, follow us on Twitter, Like us on Facebook, and join the WTS-DC LinkedIn group! CONNECTOR | AUG 2015 | 2 UPCOMING WTS-DC EVENTS Join WTS-DC at Our Upcoming Events! TRF-WTS-YPT-Reason Event: How Technology will Transform Transportation Wednesday, August 12 5:30-7:00 PM For more information and to register for the event, click here. SAVE THE DATE: How to Host a Public Meeting Workshop with WTS-DC and VDOT Tuesday, September 22 5:30-8:30 PM WTS-DC Book Club for the Busy Professional - October 2015 The Tipping Point: How Little Things Can Make a Big Difference by Malcolm Gladwell Stay tuned for information on more upcoming programs via email! CONNECTOR | AUG 2015 | 3 ANNOUNCEMENTS WTS-DC 2015 Recognition Awards: Last Call for Nominations! Recognitions are a great way to acknowledge those who support our local WTS-DC Chapter. We encourage both WTS members and friends to consider nominees for the following categories to honor the accomplishments of women and men in transportation: 1. WTS-DC Member of the Year 2. Woman of the Year 3. Employer of the Year 4. Rosa Parks Diversity Leadership Award; and 5. Innovative Transportation Solutions Award 6. Secretary Ray LaHood Award (This new award honors a man who is an outstanding role model and advocate for women in transportation.) The criteria and forms for award nominations can be found here along with a list of our past award winners. We are proud to recognize the WTS-DC Rosa Parks Diversity Leadership Award winner of 2014, US Secretary of Transportation, Anthony Foxx, who subsequently received the WTS International Rosa Parks Diversity Leadership Award. Please submit your nominations today to Kate at klefkowitz@camsys.com. Scholarship Fundraising: 2015 Goals Update The WTS mission is to “transform the transportation industry through the advancement of women.” WTS-DC believes that education is a vital tool to facilitate advancement. Every year, WTS-DC awards scholarships to deserving young women who are studying transportation at undergraduate and graduate programs in the DC area. We believe that giving scholarships is one of the most important things we do. So far this year, we have raised $1900 for the scholarship fund. If you would like to contribute to the advancement of women in the transportation industry in the DC area, please contact WTS-DC Scholarship Committee Chair, Amanda Wall Vandegrift (vandegrifta@pbworld.com). All scholarship contributions are taxdeductible and will be acknowledged in our newsletter and annual report, unless you request anonymity. CONNECTORCONNECTOR | JUNE 2014| |AUG 4 2015 | 4 WTS-DC MEMBER SPOTLIGHT Johanna Zmud Senior Research Scientist, Texas A&M Transportation Institute, College Station, TX Johanna’s background is as a social and behavioral scientist with expertise in transportation issues – particularly relating to travel behavior and emerging technologies. Her doctoral training at the University of Southern California focused on policy, new technologies, and attitude and behavior measurement. Johanna’s journey from these studies to transportation came about serendipitously. Her former firm, NuStats, was one of the first to link survey science with travel behavior surveys and analysis. They were also first in bringing technology to the capture of travel behavior information. As we built a reputation for quality and innovation, their opportunities in the transportation field grew and she learned increasingly more about a diverse set of transportation issues. After nearly 25 years, NuStats was acquired by a larger firm, and she joined the RAND Corporation to focus on transportation policy research. Now she is with TTI, which has a breadth and depth of programs, facilities, and capabilities unsurpassed by any other higher-education-affiliated transportation research organization. Johanna’s most interesting project during her professional career is the one she is working on currently. TTI runs a Transportation Policy Research Center (PRC) under the direction and support of the Texas State Legislature. And, through the PRC, She is working on a study to gather empirical evidence on people’s patterns of adoption and likely use of self-driving vehicles, and how these might influence their amount of travel, mode choice, auto ownership, and other travel behavior decisions. It combines both my interests of travel behavior and emerging transportation technologies. Because self-driving vehicles are not yet on the market, the study requires an innovative research design. WTS-DC members might be surprised to know that Johanna’s idea of a good time is hiking 150 miles in seven days. Kathryn B. Thomson General Counsel, United States Department of Transportation Washington, DC Kathryn was born and raised in Jacksonville, Illinois. She received her undergraduate degree in history and Japanese language from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign and her J.D. from the University of Pennsylvania School of Law. She practiced law with the environmental group at Sidley Austin LLP (first as an associate and then as a partner) in Washington, DC for 19 years before joining USDOT in April 2009. Kathryn joined USDOT as Counselor to Secretary Ray LaHood with the responsibility for advising the Secretary on energy, climate and environmental matters. In January 2012, she was appointed as the first woman Chief Counsel at the Federal Aviation Administration. She returned to USDOT in May 2013, first as Acting General Counsel and then as General Counsel once she was confirmed by the U.S. Senate in March 2014. Kathryn has been fortunate throughout her career to have worked on numerous challenging and worthwhile projects. The most interesting and rewarding project was working with the White House, NHTSA and EPA to develop and implement the first-ever joint fuel economy/greenhouse gas emission standards for light duty vehicles and medium and heavy duty trucks. She worked to solve challenging legal, policy and technical issues with a large and diverse group of stakeholders to more than double fuel economy standards for cars between 2009 and 2025 with no significant litigation. The standards represent a win for consumers, labor, the automobile manufacturing industry, safety groups, the environment and innovation. You may not know that Kathryn ran her first marathon at the age of 40. Since that time, she has run a total of 22 marathons, competed in multiple Olympic distance triathlons and 2 half-Ironman competitions, and completed a full Ironman competition. All transportation-related activities! CONNECTOR | AUG 2015 | 5 NEW AND REINSTATED WTS-DC MEMBERS Welcome! Jane Terry, National Safety Council Jeanine Thompson, JM Thompson Landscape Architecture PLLC Vineela Pentyala, Rutgers University Sonia Bacchus, WMATA Deb Miller, Surface Transportation Board Catherine Chardon, RATP DEV America Claire Randall, Transportation Research Board Nickell Thomas, First Transit Karen Kirksey, Maryland DOT Dana Giddens, 20twenty Strategic Consulting Ashley Bosch, Chambers, Conlon, & Hartwell, LLC PEOPLE WE KNOW WTS-DC board member, Beth Ann Ray accepted a position as Senior Manager of Grassroots Advocacy at the American Society of Civil Engineers. In her new role, Beth Ann will focus on engaging ASCE members in its Key Contact Program, managing the organization’s annual DC Legislative Fly-In, and supporting the Society’s multiple advocacy campaigns. Congratulations to WTS-DC board member Adrienne Ameel on her recent promotion to the position of Office Practice Leader at Kimley-Horn. Her new responsibilities will include business planning, developing strategies for achieving office goals and managing projects. Congratulations to WTS-DC board member Heather Rothenberg on her recent promotion to Director of Policy and Federal Projects at Sam Schwartz Engineering. Do you have news to share with the WTS-DC community? Please email suggested articles and member updates to wts.dc.newsletter@gmail.com. For more information from WTS-DC, visit us on: Facebook Twitter LinkedIn CONNECTOR | AUG 2015 | 6 WTS-DC PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT CORNER ~ Reflections on Placemaking ~ Last month’s Complete Streets Bike Tour Scholarship Fundraiser was an eye-opener for me, as one of the organizers. Many of our 37 cyclists were new to urban cycling and intimidated by the crazy busyness of DC streets. How inspiring to see an entire family, children in tow, tackle the challenges of riding through downtown and experiencing the thrill of a new activity in the company of other novice riders. That trip through the District, as seen from the saddle of a bicycle, was memorable and definitely not reproducible from behind the wheel of a car. The lesson I drew from this is one I rely on often, as a landscape ar- WTS-DC members and friends participated chitect who has morphed into an urban planner with a focus on mul- in the recent Complete Streets Bike Tour, pictured here outside of USDOT. timodal transportation. It is important to immerse oneself in the experience of place. My landscape architecture background has given me a well-organized approach to project development in the arena of public space, but sometimes it is essential to step outside of the manager’s role and turn oneself into a participant. I’ve found that there is just no substitute for directly experiencing the corridors and spaces we are designing, from a real-time perspective. Walking, cycling or even taking the bus continually presents us with unexpected events and makes us active players in the drama of the journey. Once I had an amazing opportunity to redesign the natural landscape of Fallingwater, the world famous modernist house designed by Frank Lloyd Wright. I mean, really – how does one improve on that? We did a plan, of course, since that is what landscape architects do. But the opportunity to make a difference came when we asked visitors about what was most meaningful to them during their Fallingwater pilgrimage. People told us it was the anticipation of walking through the woods, and encountering the house poised over the waterfall – an almost mystical encounter. So we reoriented our entire plan to focus on the experiential journey of seeing the house, and framing that through physical interventions in the landscape. We redesigned part of the pathway as a switchback so that people would have glimpses of the house from different vistas, drawing out the experience with more nuanced perspectives. Why is this important to professionals in the transportation field? Transportation professionals are considered to be destination-focused, utilizing traffic data showing levels of service, modal accommodation, and intersection timing cycles to make the journey as efficient and safe as possible. These are very important objectives, without question. The quality of the journey, however, can be as important as a timely arrival WTS-DC Professional Development at the destination. Allowing for the experience – a view, a place to slow Committee members and Bike Tour down, a slice of street life – helps us truly inhabit our world, and not planners extraordinaire (from left): Marita Roos, UrbanBiology LLC; Cerasela just pass through it. Cristei,Parsons Brinckerhoff; & Neelima Ghanta, HNTB —Marita Roos RLA AICP, Professional Development Committee Co-Chair CONNECTOR | AUG 2015 | 7 WTS-DC Attends the Transportation YOU Summit Board member Heather Rothenberg and her mentee, Favor Ogu, a rising senior in the TransSTEM Academy at Cardozo Education Campus participated in the fourth WTS Transportation You Summit in June. The five-day summit brought together 18 mentor-mentee pairs from WTS chapters across the country to learn more about careers in transportation, meet other students and professionals with similar interests, and see some of the sites that make Washington, DC so special. The Summit kicked off Wednesday, June 24, with a welcome dinner for attendees and members of the WTS International Board of Directors at the Mayflower Hotel. This was followed by a workshop for the mentees on developing a personal mission statement. Heather and her mentee Favor Ogu Thursday morning began an activity-packed day with an early start at the US Department of Transportation where the group heard from a diverse group of transportation professionals about their backgrounds and experience and met USDOT Deputy Secretary Victor Mendez. Next, the group headed to the Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority where they learned about the technology used to manage their transit system and provide information to the public. Favor and Heather, along with the others, then spent the afternoon at the America on the Move Exhibit at the Smithsonian and working on a small group project. Here, Heather and Favor participated in an information scavenger hunt, giving them the opportunity to discuss transportation topics beyond what was specifically presented in the exhibit. The last stop for the day before dinner was at Google where they learned about their self-driving vehicle and other projects under development. Dinner was followed by a guided night time tour of the monuments. Friday morning began with a tour of the White House, where the group had the chance to meet the President’s dogs, Bo and Sunny. This was followed by a visit to the National Transportation Safety Board where they learned about the investigation into the TWA Flight 800 crash. This included seeing the recovered wreckage and learning how it was reconstructed to help the investigation. Friday afternoon, the group visited FHWA’s Turner Fairbank Research Center where they toured research labs studying connected vehicles, driver behavior, and pavement engineering. The connected vehicles technology discussion offered an interesting counterpoint to Google’s approach to a self-driving vehicle that is autonomous. Friday ended with a dinner cruise on the Potomac. The focus on Saturday was on the development and delivery of effective presentations. Summit attendees participated in a workshop on public speaking before they prepared and delivered their own presentations. This was followed by a college information panel discussion with current students at several local colleges. Saturday night mentees received a graduation certificate at a banquet where they were addressed by and had the opportunity to ask questions of Therese McMillan, Acting Administrator of the Federal Transit Administration. Sunday morning, the group met for a final breakfast and closing remarks. When asked what her favorite activity was, WTS-DC mentee Favor Ogu responded that she really enjoyed visiting Google. This appealed to the budding entrepreneur who dreams of one day owning her own transportation technology business. She said her biggest take away was the networking. “It is important not just to meet people, but to make connections…You never know the doors that may be opened through networking.” Favor is spending the rest of her summer as an intern at the World Bank. Heather and Favor enjoyed time together before the summit discussing professional goals, college plans, and having fun. They will continue this mentor/mentee relationship, with plans for a baseball game and a double-decker bus tour of DC on the list of things they’d like to do together. Heather will also be encouraging Favor to be active in WTS activities, including applying for scholarships. CONNECTOR | AUG 2015 | 8 WTS-DC Programs: Transportation Project Management Panel Discussion A group of WTS-DC members and friends gathered over lunch at Gordon Biersch on July 29 for an engaging panel discussion with a diverse array of speakers. Moderated by Paul Rich of Deloitte, Dr. Yael Grushka-Cockayne kicked off the session by highlighting several of the most challenging biases that affect project planning and management. These include the following, which set the tone for the rest of the presentation: B IA S D e sc r i pt i o n Parkinson’s Law The task takes the amount of time you allot it. Interdependencies Managing task dependencies and sequencing. Student Syndrome A buffer is established to cushion the time it takes to accomplish a task. Procrastination ensues and the project is not started until the last minute. Multitasking Working on too many things at one time delays completion of any final product. Wendy Messenger, Chief, Program Implementation at the Federal Railroad Administration (FRA), discussed the challenges of scaling up as an agency that grew from a multi-million to multi-billion dollar budget in a short timespan. FRA needed to ramp up quickly by training project management staff and establishing a risk management framework to proactively anticipate problems and solutions. Kevin Ginnerty, Director of Project Delivery at Transurban, discussed the public-private partnership delivery of the 495 and 95 Express Lanes in Virginia. He noted that developing solid relationships between all project partners and following the mantra “no surprises” in order to keep each other informed was key to success. Julie Flores Kriegsfeld, ADS-B Project Manager at the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), explained that vision, leadership and critical thinking are all key skills for successful project management. One of the highlights of working on her current program will be the transition of Air Traffic Control operations in towers from a paper to electronic system. The speakers then answered a series of questions from the lively attendees and everyone parted ways From left: Dr. Yael Grushka-Cockayne, UVA; Julie Flores Kriegsfeld, FAA; Kevin Ginnerty, P.E., Transurban; Wendy with new ideas after eating a tasty dessert. Messenger, FRA; Paul Rich, Deloitte WTS-DC thanks Deloitte for sponsoring this informative event! CONNECTOR | AUG 2015 | 9 PEOPLE WE KNOW WTS-DC BOARD & COMMITTEE CHAIRS WASHINGTON, DC CHAPTER EXECUTIVE BOARD 2015 President Melany Alliston-Brick, Toole Design Group Vice President Avital Barnea, USDOT Treasurer Iris Ortiz, Cambridge Systematics, Inc. Secretary Dana Jaffe, AECOM WASHINGTON, DC CHAPTER COMMITTEE CHAIRS 2015 Communications/Social Media Committee Christine Sherman, RSG Marla Westervelt, Eno Center for Transportation Christine Mayeur, Nspiregreen Corporate Relations Committee Susan Sharp, Sharp & Company Shelley Johnson, Sharp & Company Patricia Happ, Info Quest Associates, Inc. Diversity Committee Balkis Hassane, Parsons Rosemary Mullane, USDOT-PHMSA Nadia Anderson, AAA Glass Ceiling Task Force Tiffany Batac, Parsons Brinckerhoff Jennifer Brickett, AASHTO Holiday Party Committee Adrienne Ameel, Kimley-Horn and Associates Danielle McCray, Kimley-Horn and Associates Hospitality Committee Moji Jimoh, WMATA Erin Shumate, Eno Center for Transportation Mary Ellen Akins, Stratacomm Megan McCarty, Toole Design Group Dulce Carrillo, WMATA Legislative Committee Cathy Connor, Parsons Brinckerhoff Beth Ann Ray, ASCE Valerie Southern, VJS-TC Isabelle Beegle-Levin, U.S. House of Representatives Anja Graves, CHG & Associates Membership Committee Maggie Schilling, USDOT-FTA Mentoring and STEM Initiative Committee Meredith Howell, USDOT Stacy Weisfeld, HDR Inc. Newsletter Committee Emily Norton, USDOT Christine Mayeur, Nspiregreen Professional Development Committee Cerasela Cristei, AEM Corporation Marita Roos, UrbanBiology LLC Neelima Ghanta, HNTB Programs Committee Kristine Boswell, USDOT Sophie Guiny, Booz Allen Hamilton Genevieve Oudar, Deloitte Amina Popowich, Deloitte Tiffani Bryant, WMATA Recognitions Committee Kate Lefkowitz, Cambridge Systematics Waiching Wong, Booz Allen Hamilton Scholarships Committee Amanda Wall Vandegrift, Parsons Brinckerhoff Maheen Aziz, USDOT Silent Auction Committee Angela Martinez, University of Maryland Transportation YOU Committee Jasmy Methipara, NHTS Program Analyst, MacroSys Heather Rothenberg, Sam Schwartz Engineering Contributors to this issue include: Melany Alliston-Brick, Toole Design Group; Marita Roos, UrbanBiology LLC; Heather Rothenberg, Sam Schwartz Engineering; Emily Norton, USDOT; Christine Mayeur, Nspiregreen LLC Many thanks to our 2014 - 2015 Corporate Members!